
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
It’s been three years since the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, took effect. At its core, the law was meant to give consumers more control over how companies collect, share and use their personal data. It was the first major privacy law with real teeth in the form of potentially large fines for companies that didn’t comply. But that didn’t really happen until recently. Marketplace’s Amy Scott speaks with Jessica Lee, who advises companies on privacy as a partner with the law firm Loeb & Loeb. She said consumer advocates tracking enforcement have been somewhat disappointed.
4.4
7171 ratings
It’s been three years since the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, took effect. At its core, the law was meant to give consumers more control over how companies collect, share and use their personal data. It was the first major privacy law with real teeth in the form of potentially large fines for companies that didn’t comply. But that didn’t really happen until recently. Marketplace’s Amy Scott speaks with Jessica Lee, who advises companies on privacy as a partner with the law firm Loeb & Loeb. She said consumer advocates tracking enforcement have been somewhat disappointed.
1,271 Listeners
1,647 Listeners
890 Listeners
8,630 Listeners
30,821 Listeners
1,358 Listeners
10 Listeners
38 Listeners
5,494 Listeners
1,433 Listeners
9,555 Listeners
3,581 Listeners
5,432 Listeners
1,319 Listeners
82 Listeners
222 Listeners
132 Listeners